The untold truth of Kitchen Nightmares

There's nothing quite like turning on a cooking show and hearing the dulcet sounds of Gordon Ramsay screaming at a befuddled chef. One of Ramsay's most popular profanity-riddled shows was Kitchen Nightmares, where the hot-tempered Scottish chef and TV personality helped struggling and failing restaurants, mainly by shouting at them about fresh produce and frozen appetizers, while the owners crossed their arms stubbornly. By the end of the episode, the restaurant's inedible food and sub-par service were (usually) transformed and saved from extinction by crippling debt or sub-par Yelp reviews.

Even though this popular restaurant makeover show was cancelled in 2014, there are still plenty of behind-the-scenes secrets that you probably never knew about Kitchen Nightmares. From how the reality show was filmed (and how much of it was actually reality) to how well restaurants fared after Ramsay's team took over their kitchen, this is the untold truth of FOX's Kitchen Nightmares.

Most of the Kitchen Nightmares eateries are now closed

Photo courtesy of FOX

Although Gordon Ramsay spent a glorious six-and-a-half seasons transforming restaurants from one-star duds to passable eateries, apparently his professional magic wore off quickly for many of the restaurants that appeared on the show.

In 2014, shortly after Kitchen Nightmares was canceled, The Daily Mail reported that 60 percent of the restaurants that appeared on the show had closed.

"You don't ask to take part in a show called Kitchen Nightmares if your restaurant business is booming and therefore it is not surprising that many of the restaurants which Gordon has visited over the ten years are now closed," a spokesperson for Ramsay told The Daily Mail at the time.

We did a quick update on those statistics for 2018 and found that only 15 restaurants out of the 77 that appeared on the show between 2007 and 2014 are still open. That means that for nearly 81 percent of these restaurants the "nightmare" is over.

One restaurant closed before the Kitchen Nightmares episode even aired

As we now know, most of the restaurants that appeared on Kitchen Nightmares didn't exactly go on to have successful runs. But some of the restaurants fared worse than others. According to The Daily Mail's report, some restaurants were closed mere months after filming. One restaurant — The Black Pearl in New York — closed just four days after their episode aired. But there is one featured restaurant that takes the cake as the unluckiest of them all: Lela's in Pomona, California closed before viewers even saw the episode.

Before the episode aired, one blogger noted that Lela's website and contact information had been taken offline. According to Screen Rant, the restaurant already faced struggles before Gordon Ramsay got in the door, and was facing bankruptcy after only eight months in business. After the episode was over, a message flashed on viewers' screens saying that, "the restaurant's debts were too much and it closed."

One restaurant owner said that Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares makeover "ruined" his restaurant

Although many of the restaurants featured on the show were happy to receive Ramsay's help, one chef in particular didn't mince words when it came to criticizing the changes the chef and his team made when he appeared on Kitchen Nightmares.

In an interview with The National Enquirer, John Chapman — restaurateur and owner of Chappy's on Church, featured in season six — said, "it was truly a kitchen nightmare for me. Gordon Ramsay destroyed my business!"

Chapman said that Ramsay "hated everything" and redid the entire menu, replacing more authentic Creole fare with cheeseburgers and fried chicken. "My cus­tomers hated it," he said, and told The National Enquirer that business went from about 200 customers a night to a mere table of patrons per evening. Chapman repeated his story to multiple news outlets, including Biz Journals and FOX News.

Gordon Ramsay has been sued multiple times by participants on Kitchen Nightmares

FOX

John Chapman isn't the only restaurant owner who was unhappy with the outcome of the show. Gordon Ramsay has been sued multiple times for his (sometimes explosive) temper by unhappy restaurant owners and chefs on the show.

In 2008, Ramsay was sued for £500,000 ($679,000 USD) for calling a restaurant manager "a lazy t*****." Martin Hyde was the restaurant manager at Dillons — a restaurant in New York City — and said that he was reamed out by Ramsay even though he had no responsibility for the kitchen, and mostly looked after the bar and restaurant events.

In 2014, another show participant sued Ramsay after he and the show's host had "an explosive row," according to The Mirror. Joe Naggy, who owned the Norwalk, Ohio restaurant, Mill Street Bistro, sued Ramsay and his crew for damages to the restaurant, including a gutted ceiling that was never fixed, and received £900 ($1,233) in compensation.

The famous Amy's Baking Company episode of Kitchen Nightmares was not staged

Do you remember that episode of Kitchen Nightmares where the owners were wackier than usual? The Amy's Baking Company episode of Kitchen Nightmares is probably the most infamous in the show's history, and the conflict was so severe that the crew didn't even get to complete their transformation. The shenanigans didn't end when the credits rolled either: The owners of the now-closed eatery were notorious for threatening customers who left bad Yelp reviews and for posting long rants on social media.

Although Amy's Baking Company is now closed, apparently their antics were just as off-the-wall as they appear in the show. One Medium blogger who was there during the filming of the two-part episode, said that the "epic blowouts" from owners Amy and Samy were "100% true to form and not doctored for TV." Although blogger Greg Taylor said that the food was "just ok," the owner's behavior when he threw a tantrum was "shocking."

Gordon Ramsay's temper only explodes when he is on camera on Kitchen Nightmares

Ramsay may be infamous for his "nightmarish" behavior on his shows, including Kitchen Nightmares and Hell's Kitchen, but apparently most of his on-air tantrums and profanity-laced rants are hammed up for the camera.

According to one show crew member who did an AMA (Ask Me Anything) on Reddit in 2013, you'll rarely see Ramsay get angry when the cameras are turned off, although he said that Ramsay's temper is real (even if it is edited later on):

"You never see him get mad off camera, but that's because he doesn't have a reason to," the former "Kitchen Nightmares" the crew member said. "The only time I saw him explode was during the dinner service when the kitchen staff was serving food that was a legitimate health risk [...] He only gets mad when he has a reason to, otherwise he's a very funny and nice dude. You can even see that in all of his UK shows. The US versions like to selectively edit to play up drama."

Even though you may think of the show Kitchen Nightmares as Gordon Ramsay's show, one couple who appeared on the show in season three, said in a 2010 interview with The New Jersey Record that they mostly interacted with Ramsay's team and crew, and barely conversed with the famous TV chef at all:

"You have no interaction with Ramsay at all. He comes with a very big machine of assistants and helpers. The only time that I ever spent any time with him was on camera."

The couple also pointed out that the producers of Kitchen Nightmares would generally try to stir up drama by asking them pointed questions like, "If this fails now, how can you stay with your husband?"

The couple ended up being happy with the way that Ramsay's team "set their restaurant up for long-term success." However, their restaurant, Bazzini, in Ridgewood, New Jersey is now closed.

It's not the same Kitchen Nightmares the UK originally got

You're familiar with the Kitchen Nightmares formula, right? Ramsay comes into a failing restaurant, berates owners and staff alike, and bullies them into being better. There's a lot of swearing, a lot of name-calling, and the sort of abuse you sort of always wanted to see heaped on authority figures. Only, that's not what you get at all in the original UK version — and The AV Club took a look at the differences.

When they watched the original UK version, they found a totally different Ramsay. The swearing, the cursing, and the yelling was gone, for the most part. He worked with restaurant owners, instead of coming in like a bulldozer. The narration was Ramsay himself, and it was Ramsay that seemed to know many were trying their best, they just had no clue how to fix what had gone wrong. There was some yelling, sure, but nothing on the scale of the US version. He's so different you'll have to wonder if he's actually someone else wearing a Gordon Ramsay skin-suit, and it's a shame Americans don't get to see that side of him very often.

One restaurant owner from Kitchen Nightmares had mob ties

During the first season of Kitchen Nightmares, in 2007, Ramsay and his team actually gave a helping hand to an ex-mobster. Peter's was a New York restaurant featured on an episode where the problem was the owner's extravagant spending. It only came out later, when Gang Land News (via Cosa Nostra News) uncovered an FBI report from 2003 that said Peter "Pasta" Pellegrino had been a recently made man associated with the Bonanno crime family.

According to the Cosa Nostra News, Peter Pasta had already been kicked out of the family by the time he was on Kitchen Nightmares, as he had apparently been "falsely labeled 'a rat', with all its obvious nasty ramifications and ugly possibilities hanging over his head."

It may have been for the best that Pellegrino had already been ousted by the mob before he saw how his episode turned out, as he had nothing good to say about the way he was portrayed. "That makes me look like... some kind of an animal, and worse. It's a real-life nightmare," he told Gang Land News.

Customers on Kitchen Nightmares are paid

There have been a lot of accusations leveled at Ramsay and Kitchen Nightmares, including claims that the show's team plants a lot of the rotten food he "finds" and that all of those incredibly grossed-out customers that sit down to eat are paid actors. According to The Guardian, Ramsay doesn't take the accusations lightly, and after one newspaper published stories about fakery, he sued for libel and won.

But there's one claim that might have some weight to it, and that's the one where customers are said to be paid actors. It's likely a half-truth, if the fine print of the credits is to be believed.

Reality Blurred picked up on the disclaimers, written in the credits that most of us fast-forward through. One reads, "The producers may have provided customers at the restaurant with a financial contribution towards the cost of their meal."

What, exactly, that means isn't clear, and while it doesn't suggest they're actors, they are getting compensated for being on the show. But isn't that fair? You wouldn't want to pay for some of the food these places are serving up pre-Ramsay, would you?

One Kitchen Nightmares restaurant sued him twice

Roy Rochlin/Getty Images

It's no secret that the restaurants on Kitchen Nightmares don't feature the kinds of kitchens you'd want your food coming out of... not at first, at least. So, it's also not surprising that some have taken issue with the way they're portrayed — perhaps none more strongly than Oceana Grill.

The New Orleans seafood joint has sued Ramsay not once, but twice.

According to Today, the first lawsuit came in 2011. The owners of Oceana didn't want the episode to air because they felt they had been misrepresented — and in case you're wondering just which episode this was, you know the infamous clip: Ramsay vomiting after getting a whiff of some supposedly rotten shrimp. The episode still made it to air, but there were concessions made in the form of a settlement where the show's producers agreed that if footage from Oceana was used in the future, the restaurant would be paid for it. They were also required to update viewers to the changes made at the restaurant any time they were featured.

The second lawsuit came in 2018, when the Kitchen Nightmares British Facebook page posted that infamous, aforementioned clip with the caption, "No wonder this restaurant is failing..." Oceana and their legal team took issue with the fact that the post made it look like the restaurant was still in the same state it was seven years prior (which they called "largely fabricated in the first place.") Lesson? Be careful what you post on Facebook.

Yes, there are some success stories from Kitchen Nightmares

Sure, Kitchen Nightmares is a little notorious for its failure rate, but there are some major success stories.

Like Pantaleone's, the Denver pizza place with an owner who just couldn't understand why no one was coming in the door. It was the typical Kitchen Nightmares mess: denial, stress, and struggle. Fast forward to after filming, and the Gazette Review says the pizza place went on to become a success. Sure, there's still some grumbling, but based on their TripAdvisor and Yelp reviews, they're consistently 4-5 stars.

Also still open is Cafe Hon, featured in Season 5 and run by an owner who had managed to alienate much of the town with her attempts at trademarking the word "hon." They've got around a 3.5 rating on TripAdvisor now, and a 2.5 on Yelp, which means they're not a huge hit — but they're not out of business, either.

Yanni's Greek Cuisine is still open, too, from Season 6. The hundreds of reviews on Yelp have them sitting at a comfortable 4 stars, while TripAdvisor has them at 4.5. Not all the restaurants Kitchen Nightmares have visited reverted back to their old ways and for some, the experience truly was life-changing.

The suicide of one restaurant owner had an eerie connection to the Kitchen Nightmares episode

In 2007, Kitchen Nightmares visited Campania, an Italian restaurant in New Jersey where the problem was a boss that was too laid-back to tell employees what needed to be done to make them successful. When NJ.com ran a follow-up article with the headline "Joe Cerniglia of Campania survived Gordon Ramsay's Kitchen Nightmares", he didn't have anything bad to say about the experience. But they had no idea what kind of terrible foreshadowing the headline held.

In 2010, ABC News reported that chef Joe Cerniglia had committed suicide. It was only a day later that the New York Post (via Fox News) connected his personal problems to an affair he'd been having with a pastry chef at the restaurant (amid a separation from his wife), and only a day after that E! News found he'd had previous issues with cocaine and narcotics.

The tragedy happened a few years after Kitchen Nightmares, but news outlets were quick to point out something eerie: Ramsay had told him "Your business is about to f*****g swim down the Hudson"... which was precisely where his body was discovered.

If you or anyone you know is having suicidal thoughts, please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

That time Gordon Ramsay tricked a vegetarian into eating ham on Kitchen Nightmares

The decision to go vegetarian isn't one for everyone, but it's simple enough to respect it. Ramsay got quite a bit of heat from the media after the airing of a UK episode of Kitchen Nightmares at La Lanterna in Hertfordshire (via The Telegraph), because of a cruel "prank" played on one vegetarian on the show.

The incident involved volunteers, including one eight-year vegetarian, recruited on the street to sample pizzas from the featured restaurant. When it was time to try the pizza, Ramsay assured a volunteer that one was, in fact, vegetarian. After the man ate it, he clarified... it was vegetarian except for the ham. Ramsay laughed as the man ran off, and a slew of celebrity chefs condemned the disrespect.

The Guardian was quick to point out just how bad an example he was setting, asking if he would have played the same "joke" on someone who avoided certain foods for religious reasons or because of allergies. When it comes to food, it shouldn't be a case of 'do as I say, not as I do'.

Here's why his failure rate for Kitchen Nightmares is really so high

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For all the restaurants that do fail after a Gordon Ramsay-led makeover on Kitchen Nightmares, it seems a little mind-boggling from the viewer's point of view. But Gene Marks of the small business consulting firm The Marks Group says (via Entrepreneur) that there's something going on here that viewers don't see.

He says that running a successful restaurant is about more than just good food, it's the ability to think on the fly, to organize, to manage, to market, and make the tough business decisions that pop up on a daily basis. Some of that can be taught, but some can't. What it comes down to is that some people have the innate ability to run a successful business, and some don't — but everyone seems to think they've got what it takes to run a restaurant. According to Marks, it doesn't matter how good a menu is, if there's not that innate business acumen, it just isn't going to work.

He's got a different take on the numbers, too. Marks says: "... a whopping 60 percent of the restaurants Ramsay tried to help failed after his visit. Does this surprise you? [...] Based on my experiences, I would've thought that the number was higher. The fact that it's only a 60 percent failure rate is a testament to Ramsay's abilities."

Gordon Ramsay regrets ending Kitchen Nightmares

FOX

Are you a Kitchen Nightmares superfan who misses the show? Ramsay feels your pain. The popular show that launched Ramsay's TV career ended in 2014 in part because Ramsay was tired of the restaurants he fixed reverting back to their old ways and failing (which may explain why so many of the restaurants closed since their episodes aired!).

In an interview with The New York Daily News in 2017, Ramsay explained that he was tired of the criticism he was getting from fans for Kitchen Nightmares restaurants closing left and right.

"I got fed up with Kitchen Nightmares because I was getting s***," he said. "So I woke up one morning and I thought 'f*** it, I'm done.' "

He added his remorse at the decision to pull his own show off the air, which was admittedly made in anger: "Yes it was wrong to pull my own show off air, but that's it."